The Real Brian McKnight Pt. 1

One of the worst kept secrets in history is that music has a way of affecting how we feel about people. Music also makes us feel a certain way about the artists that create the music. Whatever emotions the message and the melody conjure up for us, we subconsciously associate the artist with those virtues and flaws. Brian McKnight has sold millions of records by writing songs about love and loss and singing them with alarming range and ability. His penchant for writing beautiful ballads of love and loss proved a gift and a curse, dually providing him with 16 Grammy nominations and a general consensus stigma as a 24 hour sage of the sentimental.

That notion presented itself in definitive fashion when the citizens of the World Wide Web got a glimpse of a video clip he shared with his twitter followers. The content of said video was a preview of a song entitled, “If You’re Ready to Learn,” which featured lyrics depicting a man eager to help a lady be more inquisitive about the more delicate parts of her body. McKnight did this as a lark, but while his twitter followers were sharing the laugh along with him, the rest of the world got bruised chins from dropping their jaws so violently.

To his fans, McKnight is an approachable artist with a sure-footed dry sense of humor. The casual admirers not privy to his brand of comedy (on full display in his hilarious, criminally brief cameo as a pimp in Blaxploitation spoof Black Dynamite), were far more cynical; McKnight’s trying to revamp what they see as a career wound down. An unquestionably frustrating situation for McKnight, he continues to see this as an opportunity to reveal to people that there’s more to him than just being the “Back at One” guy.

“I think this song, “If You’re Ready to Learn” is more the real me than any of the other music I’ve ever done as a whole,” McKnight told iRockJazz. “Now, I did feel that way when I wrote those other songs, but wasn’t general me. That’s what people get mixed up; it was a moment in time, that’s how I felt, but I don’t walk about with my head in the clouds all the time because I’m so in love or I’m so down. I’m usually watching Sportscenter.” Indeed, there’s more to McKnight than what the average person with internet access and preconceived notions of black radio might believe.

For now, Brian McKnight is a lightning rod of controversy for peculiar circumstances typical of today’s celebrity obsessed society. It’s imperative to remember why so much attention is being paid to him: the man can sing, and he was born to do so.

Early Days

While “If You’re Ready to Learn” wouldn’t indicate as much, McKnight honed his musical virtuosity in the church. Growing up in Florida, and later Alabama in the 1970s, Brian and his family lived and breathed music in the temple of the Seventh-day Adventist. For Brian, singing and walking both occurred at the same time. “We grew up singing in the church,” McKnight explains. “In my family on my mother’s side, everybody sings, everybody plays, everybody was musical. So it wasn’t a surprise to be doing music.” It may not be a surprise with today’s hindsight, but at the time, Brian didn’t refer to his voice as a gift.

With a family full of great singers, it was as arbitrary as an eye blink. “The thing that you have to understand – and people kind of look at me funny when I say this – singing was not important; it’s just was we did. When everyone in my family could sing like that, it was almost like you were desensitized to it. It’s like walking and talking.”

What did impress Brian were the musicians he heard on the stereo. Unlike most Seventh-day Adventists, McKnight’s parents were fairly lenient when it came to playing secular music in the house. He grew up to the sounds of The Platters, Miles Davis, Mongo Santamaria and the blaxploitation soundtracks of Shaft and Superfly. Those records his parents played were the foundation of his journey to becoming a musician. “The person I listened to the most was Nat King Cole because they had every record he made,” McKnight recalls. “Next to him, there were piano players like Oscar Peterson, Errol Garner and George Shearing very early on. And I knew right from there that I wanted to play the piano, after listening to those guys play.”

At age six, Brian began teaching himself piano. His mother gave him some extra education when she would bring him along with her to play at sermons. “Once we moved to Florida, and my mother realized I could play piano, that’s when her second job was playing in churches on Sundays,” McKnight recounts with a chuckle. “I would end up partaking along with her to every church we would play at. She’d play organ and I’d play piano and that’s really what allowed me to learn to play the piano; learning songs I didn’t know, on the fly, with my mom. I hated it, but I love her for it now.”

Indeed, that musical baptism by fire paid off with dividends. As a teenager, McKnight possessed the improvisational and structural discipline of a veteran jazz pianist. He became equally as dedicated when he picked up guitar at age 12. By the time he was in high school, he could play nine instruments. “In high school I had a band, and we would play gigs on the weekends. So on Friday nights we’d play in a club and then on Saturday mornings, because I had to be in bed early in order to get up and play at church with my mom on Sunday. After rehearsals, I would take the other guys’ instruments and I would try to learn them.” After rehearsals, I would take the other guys’ instruments and I would try to learn them.”

Brian McKnight (photo/Getty Images)

Stevie Wonder and Kenny Loggins, Key Musical Influences

When artists like Brian McKnight come along, fans and critics tend to almost instinctively draw comparisons to other artists in order to label them. McKnight is a black singer who writes ballads and plays piano; therefore he’s instantly compared to Stevie Wonder. McKnight’s artistry has drawn from several sources, be he’d be first one to tell you that Wonder, indeed, had a profound effect on him. His tonality and note bending riffs are testaments to Wonder’s influence. Brian remembers his first Stevie album: “My brother bought the Innervisions record and brought it home and wore the groove off that thing, brother. It was crack! [Laughs]”

In addition to artists like Wonder and Earth, Wind and Fire, another had a potent impression on both Brian’s vocals and guitar work, but it’s obvious to the untrained ear: “I would sit with Kenny Loggins records all day long, ‘cause he’s a singer/songwriter/guitar player,” McKnight told. Loggins is best remembered for his hit contributions to 1980s soundtracks like Footloose, Caddyshack and Top Gun. McKnight was enticed by his more organic, acoustic records. “I would sit there and try to play them, and try to sing like him.

There’s a part of Kenny’s voice that he’s got that I didn’t have on my first two albums that I had to beat my voice up to get; sort of raspy, so I could call on that you need it. I really got it from him. I never talk about it much, because he’s not the first person I think of, but my music would be drastically different without the additions of Stevie Wonder and Kenny Loggins in it.” To this day, McKnight pre-concert exercises include songs by both Wonder and Loggins. “I don’t do vocal exercises like vocal coaches will tell you to. I sing songs. I start my warm up with “All in Love is Fair” from Stevie and then I get my guitar and sing “Heart to Heart,” and I’m ready to go. I can go all night after singing those songs.”

The precision of McKnight’s arrangement and melodic leanings – heard in songs like “Never Felt This Way” or “Love of My Life” – draw from the so-called smooth jazz artists of the 1980s. Having already engaged in instrumental composition, men like David Sanborn, Marcus Miller and Al Jarreau were ripe templates for McKnight. “I feel like the ‘80s was the greatest time for music,” McKnight explained. “It was the beginning of the synthesizers and that time to use drumming machines. But it wasn’t sequenced yet, so you still had to play. All the rock bands like the Police and Chicago and Toto; these were some of the most fantastic musicians we’ve ever heard playing these pop songs that were pop at the time, but they were also very intricate. If you remember “Rosanna” by Toto and they go into that jazz breakdown in the middle when [David] Paich is playing, it’s just gold, man. Not to mention all those Steely Dan records that I still learn from everyday.” McKnight cited Steely Dan’s Gaucho as his all-time favorite album.

Perhaps the most critical influence on Brian’s success in the record business came from his big brother, Claude III. He founded a Capella group Take 6 at Alabama’s Oakwood College. When Brian enrolled at Oakwood himself in 1987, Take 6 was signed by Warner Brothers and prospered swiftly, selling a million albums and collaborating with Quincy Jones within a year. Such achievements were the catalyst for Brian’s own show business ambitions. “What it did was show me what was possible,” Brian spoke of Claude’s success. “At that time, you didn’t know anybody who made it, not like that. All we saw were stars. Now here’s my brother on Grammys singing, and getting a couple that first time. So, what it did was it got me out of the classroom and into the studio every day. I did wanted at that point, and I wasn’t gonna let anybody stand in my way of getting it.” And so, from the beginning of the spring semester of his sophomore year at Oakwood, Brian made and shopped his demos to various labels, and by the time second semester was ending in May of 1988, he got signed by Mercury Records. “Getting signed was the easy part. It took three years to put out an album.”

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